IDB-SHP-009
Logistics · Incoterms · duties · VAT
Shipping, taxes and customs
Reference for moving hardware from an Asian factory to a US or EU destination — Incoterms, freight modes, customs value, duty calculation, HS codes, free-trade preferences, and the document set.
Abstract
Once the factory is paid and cartons are palletised, the project shifts from engineering to logistics: Incoterms, HS codes, bills of lading, customs bonds, freight rates, broker hand-off. Individually these are not difficult; collectively, small mistakes compound into demurrage, seized cartons, or duty assessments above expected landed cost.
This document covers Incoterms (Section 1), sea vs. air freight economics (Section 2), customs value and duty calculation in the US, EU, and UK (Section 3), HS code classification (Section 4), free-trade preferences (Section 5), and the document set for pre-arrival clearance (Section 6).
1.Incoterms 2020
Incoterms define which party is responsible for each leg of the shipment. ICC publishes the current version (Incoterms 2020). Cite the version in contracts: "FOB Shanghai (Incoterms 2020)".
1.1The 11 Incoterms 2020 in scope
| Code | Risk transfer | Freight | Insurance | Import clearance | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EXW | Factory door | Buyer | Buyer | Buyer | Strong buyer logistics |
| FCA | Carrier at named place | Buyer | Buyer | Buyer | First-time importers |
| FAS | Alongside ship | Buyer | Buyer | Buyer | Bulk / heavy cargo |
| FOB | On board ship | Buyer | Buyer | Buyer | Most first imports |
| CFR | Port of destination | Seller | Buyer | Buyer | Hands-off buyer |
| CIF | Port of destination | Seller | Seller (min) | Buyer | Hands-off + insured |
| CPT | Place of destination | Seller | Buyer | Buyer | Multi-modal |
| CIP | Place of destination | Seller | Seller (110 %) | Buyer | Multi-modal + insured |
| DAP | Buyer's address | Seller | Seller | Buyer | Experienced supplier |
| DPU | Unloaded at named place | Seller (incl. unload) | Seller | Buyer | Rare; specific cases |
| DDP | Buyer's address | Seller | Seller | Seller | Very experienced supplier |
1.2Recommended pattern for first import
- Buy FOB from the supplierSupplier delivers to port of loading + export cleared.
- Book your own forwarder for sea freightVisibility on cost, timing, and document flow.
- Use a customs broker in the destination countryHandles import clearance.
- Avoid DDP from a new supplierForces them to commit to duties and broker quality they likely don't actually understand.
2.Sea vs. air freight
AIR FREIGHT
dense, high-value cargo
SEA FREIGHT
typical mass production
LCL
small first batch
2.1Sea freight
- FCL (Full Container Load)Above ~15 m³. Cheaper per m³.
- LCL (Less than Container Load)Below 15 m³. Slower (deconsolidation at destination port), higher port hold-up risk.
- Transit timePort-to-port:
- China → US West Coast: 14–20 days - China → US East Coast: 25–35 days - China → Europe (Rotterdam, Hamburg): 30–40 days - China → UK (Felixstowe): 32–42 days - China → Australia (Sydney): 18–25 days
2.2Container reference (standard)
| Container | Internal dim (L × W × H, m) | Volume (m³) | Max payload (kg) | Typical use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20' standard (20'GP) | 5.9 × 2.35 × 2.39 | 33 | 28 000 | Heavy cargo, half-loads |
| 40' standard (40'GP) | 12.0 × 2.35 × 2.39 | 67 | 28 800 | Most consumer goods |
| 40' high cube (40'HC) | 12.0 × 2.35 × 2.69 | 76 | 28 600 | Lightweight, voluminous |
| 45' high cube | 13.6 × 2.35 × 2.69 | 86 | 27 600 | Maximum European inland reach |
Loading efficiency: target ~85–90 % of volume; below 70 % means LCL is cheaper.
2.3LCL rate basis
- Per cubic meter (CBM) with a 1 CBM minimum.
- Or weight ton (1 CBM or 1 000 kg, whichever is higher)favors dense cargo.
- Typical rate China → EU: $60–120 / CBM + port charges.
- Typical rate China → US: $40–90 / CBM + port charges.
- Port charges (THC, ISPS, doc fee)Often $300–600 per shipment; can exceed freight on small LCL.
2.4Air freight
- Volumetric weightAirlines charge whichever is greater: actual weight or volumetric.
- Volumetric formula
(L × W × H in m) × 200for most carriers (167 for some couriers). - Worked example: 0.82 × 1.2 × 0.65 m = 0.64 m³ box.
- At 91 kg actual → volumetric 128 kg → billed at 128 kg ($4.80/kg = $614). - At 171 kg actual → volumetric 128 kg → billed at 171 kg ($4.60/kg = $787).
- Transit time:
- Courier (DHL, FedEx, UPS): 3–5 days door-to-door, customs included. - Standard air cargo: 5–10 days airport-to-airport, customs separate.
2.5Rate benchmarks (2025, USD)
| Route | LCL ($/CBM) | FCL 40'GP ($/cont) | Air courier ($/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| China → US West Coast | $50–80 | $2 000–3 500 | $5–8 |
| China → US East Coast | $70–100 | $3 500–5 500 | $6–9 |
| China → EU (Rotterdam) | $80–120 | $3 000–5 000 | $5–8 |
| China → UK (Felixstowe) | $90–130 | $3 500–5 500 | $5–8 |
| China → AU (Sydney) | $80–110 | $2 500–4 000 | $4–7 |
Rates fluctuate significantly with peak season (Chinese New Year, Q4), fuel, geopolitical disruption. Verify current rates with 2–3 forwarders before each shipment.
2.6Required documents
2.7Export packaging
- Carton wallDouble-wall corrugated minimum for export (BC or DC flute).
- Edge protectionFoam corner protectors for stacking.
- Pallet wrapStretch wrap for unit-loading; banding for security.
- Master carton sealingReinforced packaging tape; not just standard tape.
- Wood palletsMust be ISPM 15 heat-treated (HT stamp). Plastic or pressed-fiber pallets exempt.
- Loading photosRequest before container doors close.
3.Customs value and duties
Customs value is the dollar amount duty and VAT are calculated on. It is not the price paid; different countries calculate it differently.
3.1What's included in customs value
- Product price paid to the supplier (per the commercial invoice).
- Tooling and mold costs amortised into unit price (or as a separate "assist" line for US).
- Sample costs paid earlier (yes, prior prototype invoices).
- Royalties or license fees tied to the import (where condition of sale).
- Buyer-supplied materials ("assists"): if the buyer provides parts the supplier uses, add to customs value.
3.2US procedure
- Customs valueBased on FOB (price only; freight excluded). Per 19 CFR § 152.
- DutyCustoms value × HS rate (typically 0–6 % for consumer goods).
- MPF (Merchandise Processing Fee)0.3464 % (min $32, max $634 per entry, 2025).
- HMF (Harbor Maintenance Fee)0.125 % (sea freight only).
- Customs bondRequired for shipments over $2 500. Single-entry $50–200 OR continuous bond $400–800/year covering $50 000+ entries.
- Importer of RecordRequires EIN (free from IRS) and CBP Form 5106 filing.
3.3EU procedure
- Customs valueBased on CIF (price + freight + insurance to first EU port).
- DutyCIF × HS rate.
- VAT(CIF + Duty) × destination country VAT rate.
- VAT reclaimAvailable to VAT-registered businesses; cash flow impact remains until refund.
- EORI numberRequired for any commercial EU import (one-time, free).
3.4EU VAT rates by member state (2025)
| Country | Standard VAT | Reduced (some products) |
|---|---|---|
| Germany | 19 % | 7 % |
| France | 20 % | 5.5 % / 10 % |
| Spain | 21 % | 10 % |
| Italy | 22 % | 4 % / 5 % / 10 % |
| Netherlands | 21 % | 9 % |
| Belgium | 21 % | 6 % / 12 % |
| Sweden | 25 % | 6 % / 12 % |
| Poland | 23 % | 5 % / 8 % |
| Ireland | 23 % | 9 % / 13.5 % |
| Hungary | 27 % (highest in EU) | 5 % / 18 % |
3.5UK procedure (post-Brexit)
- Customs valueCIF basis (same as EU).
- UK dutyCustoms value × UK Global Tariff rate (typically same as EU for now; 0–6 %).
- UK VATStandard 20 % (or 0 % / 5 % for some categories).
- GB EORIRequired separately from EU EORI.
3.6Worked customs calculations
Scenario: 5 000 wristwatches, FOB Shanghai $4.00 each, HS code 9102.11 (mechanical watch).
US import (Los Angeles):
- FOB value: $20 000
- HS 9102.11 duty rate (US HTSUS): 3.1 % = $620
- MPF: 0.3464 % = $69 (within min/max)
- HMF: 0.125 % = $25
- Customs bond (single entry): $80
- Broker fee: ~$150
- Total US import cost: $20 944 ($4.19/unit, +4.7 %)
EU import (Rotterdam → Germany):
- FOB value: $20 000
- Sea freight to Rotterdam: $2 100
- Insurance: $50
- CIF value: $22 150
- HS 9102.11 EU duty (TARIC): 4.5 % = $997
- VAT base: $23 147
- VAT (German 19 %): $4 398 (reclaimable for B2B)
- Broker fee: ~$200
- Total landed: $26 747 ($5.35/unit, +33.7 %)
- Cash cost after VAT reclaim: $22 349 ($4.47/unit, +11.7 %)
4.HS code classification
HS = Harmonized System. 6-digit international code; extended to 8 digits (EU HS-CN) or 10 digits (US HTSUS, UK Global Tariff). Same first 6 digits worldwide.
4.1Common HS codes for electronics
| HS code | Product | EU duty | US duty | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8517.62 | Routers, switches, NICs | 0 % | 0 % | Common networking |
| 8517.71 | Modems, repeaters | 0 % | 0 % | |
| 8517.69 | Other comms equipment | 0 % | 0 % | |
| 8528.59 | LCD monitors, TVs <14" | 14 % | 0 % | Consumer electronics |
| 8526.92 | Radio remote control | 3.7 % | 0 % | RC, key fobs |
| 8543.70 | Other electrical machines | 2.7 % | 0 % | Catch-all electronics |
| 9006.59 | Other cameras | 4.2 % | 0 % | |
| 9018.19 | Medical devices, general | 0 % | 0 % | |
| 9028.30 | Electricity meters | 2.1 % | 0 % | |
| 8504.40 | Power supplies, chargers | 3.3 % | 0 % | Adapters, USB chargers |
| 8507.60 | Lithium-ion batteries | 2.7 % | 3.4 % | |
| 9102.11 | Mechanical watches | 4.5 % | 3.1 % | |
| 6307.90 | Apparel accessories, other | 6.3 % | 7 % | Strap, lanyard |
| 4202.92 | Bags, cases, plastic outer | 9.7 % | 17.6 % | Carry cases |
4.2Classification rules
- General Rules of Interpretation (GRI)Apply in order 1 through 6.
- GRI 1Heading title + section/chapter notes. Most products classify here.
- GRI 3(a)Most specific description prevails.
- GRI 3(b)Essential character (for mixed/composite goods).
- Get a binding ruling for uncertain casesUS: CBP eRulings (free, 30 days). EU: BTI (Binding Tariff Information, free, 1–4 months).
4.3Classification cost of being wrong
- Customs reclassifies up: pay difference + interest + ~5–8 % penalty
- Customs reclassifies down: refund possible within 1 year (US: liquidation)
- Intentional misclassification: fraud penalties up to 8× the lost duty
5.Free trade preferences
Eligible imports under an FTA can be duty-free or reduced. Requires Certificate of Origin.
5.1Major FTAs in 2025
| FTA | Members | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| USMCA | US, Canada, Mexico | Replaced NAFTA 2020; rules of origin per product |
| RCEP | China, Japan, Korea, ASEAN, AU, NZ | Largest by GDP; effective 2022 |
| EU-Vietnam EVFTA | EU + Vietnam | Phased duty elimination through 2030 |
| EU-Singapore EUSFTA | EU + Singapore | In force 2019 |
| EU-Japan EPA | EU + Japan | In force 2019 |
| EU-Korea FTA | EU + South Korea | In force 2011 |
| EU-UK TCA | EU + UK | Post-Brexit 2021; complex rules of origin |
| UK-Australia FTA | UK + Australia | In force 2023 |
| UK-Japan CEPA | UK + Japan | In force 2021 |
| China-AU ChAFTA | China + Australia | In force 2015 |
5.2Rules of origin
- Wholly obtainedMined, grown, or born in the FTA territory.
- Substantial transformationSufficient manufacturing in the FTA territory to change HS code (typically 4-digit shift).
- Regional value content (RVC)Local content threshold (typically 40–60 %).
- Specific process rulesFor textiles, autos, electronics.
5.3Cost of claiming preference
- Certificate of OriginRequired document; issued by chamber of commerce or self-certified per FTA.
- Origin verificationRandom post-clearance audit by customs. Keep documentation for 5 years.
- Cost of errorIf origin claim disallowed: pay full duty + penalty (~10 %).